Pages

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Repost: Re-Animator (October 15th at the Capitol Theater, part of 12 Hours of Terror)

[RE-ANIMATOR screens Saturday October 15th at the Capitol Theater as part of 12 Hours of Terror. The event starts at 8:00 pm.]

Review by Bob Ignizio

Horror writer H.P. Lovecraft is arguably second only to Edgar
Allan Poe as an American master of the short horror tale. His most
famous works tended to deal with scientifically plausible (at least
to readers at the time) cosmic menaces rather than the supernatural.
Even when he dealt with concepts like witchcraft, it was with a
scientific explanation involving weird geometry. And when it came to
graphic depictions of horror and violence, Lovecraft was the picture
of restraint, generally suggesting rather than showing. Even at the
time he wrote these tales, between 1917 and 1935, his work was
considered tame compared to his more lurid contemporaries. But then
there was“Herbert West,
Re-Animator”, a gory serial about a medical student who has
invented a serum that brings the dead back to life as violent,
cannibalistic zombies, all this decades before George Romero's NIGHT
OF THE LIVING DEAD
made the cannibal zombie archetype the norm.

If the story was a departure for
Lovecraft, the film version of RE-ANIMATOR
is even more drastically removed from its author's style and tastes.
It's a darkly comic romp in which fake blood flows like water and
rubber organs and body parts litter the screen. There's also more
than enough nudity and bizarre sexual antics to make the prudish
Lovecraft blush. And yet the film's excesses are balanced by a clever
sense of humor and intelligent filmmaking throughout. And where most
horror/comedies fail at both their goals, RE-ANIMATOR
is a spectacular success on all fronts.

The
basic story doesn't stray too far from Lovecraft's plot, with West
(Jeffrey Combs) carrying on his forbidden experiments at various
schools before landing at the fictional New England institution Miskatonik University. The biggest change
is the addition of an attractive fiancée for Herbert's assistant Dan
Cain (Bruce Cabbot) in the form of Meagan Halsey (Barbara Crampton),
daughter of the university's Dean (Robert Sampson). The film also
gives Herbert a rival in the form of Professor Carl Hill (David
Gale), who bears some resemblance to various characters in the short
stories.

RE-ANIMATOR made horror icons out of Combs, Gale, and Crampton, who would
all re-team with director Stuart Gordon and screenwriter Dennis Paoli
on their next Lovecraft adaptation FROM
BEYOND.
It also managed to win over not just horror fans, but many mainstream
critics who appreciated the film's wit and intelligence as much as
the gorehounds appreciated its many disgusting set pieces. This is
the kind of film that can somehow pull off a scene in which a body
carries its severed head around and maneuvers it in such as way as to
perform oral pleasure on a bound female cast member, yet somehow
manages to make that seem both horrific and funny without coming
across as sexist. Of course if you just read that sentence and
thought to yourself, “yeah, that's not for me,” you're probably
right. But for the rest of us sick and twisted individuals who have a
dark streak to our sense of humor, it doesn't get much better than
RE-ANIMATOR.
4 out of 4 stars.